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Saturday, December 4, 2021

The Dragon Reborn by: Robert Jordan: The Shift Begins (Prologue to Chapter 3)

 

“The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend.  Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again.  In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.  The wind was not the beginning, there are neither beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time.  But it was a beginning.” – The Dragon Reborn, p. 31.

 

The Wheel of Time is no longer simply a book series.  As of writing this the first four episodes of the television adaptation have been released and while I do have plans to cover them in essay format, I will be waiting until after all eight episodes of the first season have been released.  In the meantime, The Dragon Reborn is the third book of The Wheel of Time and it’s opening chapters mark the beginning of a shift in Robert Jordan’s series.  The Great Hunt ended with Rand declaring himself the Dragon Reborn, not entirely by choice, accepting that is who he is even if he will still be grappling with what exactly that means, but The Dragon Reborn begins some months after that to properly deal with the fallout of what is a farm boy declaring himself a lord who is coming to save the world.  The prologue begins our shift by following the style of prologue for The Eye of the World and The Great Hunt in following characters who don’t get other points of view, in this case Pedron Niall, Lord Captain Commander of the Children of the Light, reacting to Rand’s declaration of being the Dragon Reborn.  The entire idea is that Niall wishes to use what he thinks is a false Dragon, yet is asking Jachim Carridin to bring him in alive, due to plans to use the political upheaval to his own ends.  This is the first time the reader is able to see the politics of the wider world moving on their own.  Carridin is revealed to be a Darkfriend after the prologue gives us a section from his head (a Fade telling him to set out and kill Rand against orders of Niall, because why would the Dark One be interested in what the Whitecloaks are planning?  It opens up the world oh so much, and while these Whitecloak characters will reappear, the prologue itself is continuing the slight trend of prologues getting longer.  Eventually they will reach a length of approximately 100 pages, and this is where that begins.

 

When the novel begins proper, the frameshift becomes all the more apparent with the point of view being not our typical opening with Rand al’Thor, but with Perrin Aybara just outside of Rand’s camp.  Perrin’s point of view is the point of view for the first eight chapters, until Rand will eventually get some of the ninth to him, before moving to Egwene.  While these may be slight spoilers for what’s coming, it’s actually really important to show just how much the ending of The Great Hunt changes things.  The Great Hunt was a book which didn’t explicitly say the wedge was being driven away between Rand, Mat, and Perrin, but The Dragon Reborn makes that clear.  Mat is gone, away for healing at the White Tower, Perrin is our point of view, Rand is described as a lord, and Jordan has implemented a timeskip into the next year.  Immediately from Perrin’s thought process there’s something there “I am tired o all this waiting, this sitting while Moiraine holds is tight as tongs.  Burn the Aes Sedai! When will it end?...He sniffed the wind without thinking.  The smell of horse predominated, and of men and men’s sweat. A rabbit had gone through those trees not long since…He realized what he was doing and stopped it.” – The Dragon Reborn, p. 32.  Perrin is already struggling against the wolves, attempting to not give in to animalistic instincts and is being pushed away from Rand.  It’s Moiraine and Rand who are calling the shots, Moiraine who is waiting for something, while Perrin is just tired.  When his group finds the woman they’re waiting for, a Tinker called Leya, he thinks this “Sad? I’m not sad, just. . . . Light, I don’t know.  There ought to be a better way, that’s all.” – The Dragon Reborn, p. 39.  Perrin is tired from the violence, he’s not a fighter, he’s a blacksmith and because this is where we can actually see an extended period in is head that informs just what is being shifted.  It’s why the Tinkers are being brought back into the story, to look at a possible outcome of this internal conflict.

 

The reader doesn’t actually see Rand until the second chapter “Saidin”.  The chapter has the air of horror looming, Min sees that the Tinker woman is going to die.  Perrin thinks he might be able to work out if that means the camp is going to be attacked, but that’s not how Min’s viewings work on a fundamental level.  It’s here where we get to see what Rand is doing, that is cracking slowly under the pressure of being the Dragon Reborn.  There is a repeat of the prophecy of the herons and dragons which will mark the Dragon Reborn.  Perrin cannot entirely provide the comfort that Rand needs, but does provide someone to confide in.  The reader doesn’t get to see inside Rand’s head here for the first time, so all we have is Perrin being calm and not immediately answering the questions.  There’s the question of if Mat is safe at Tar Valon now, and when Perrin finds the words, this is what happens ““Lately…I find myself wishing I was still a blacksmith. Do you. . . . Do you wish you were still just a shepherd?”  “Duty,” muttered Rand. “Death is lighter than a feather, duty heavier than a mountain.  That’s what they say in Shienar. ‘The Dark One is stirring.  The Last Battle is coming.  And the Drgon Reborn has to face the Dark One in the Last Battle, or the Shadow will cover everything.  The Wheel of Time is broken…There’s only me...I have the duty, because there isn’t anybody else, now is there?”” – The Dragon Reborn, p. 51.  Rand is visibly breaking down, not going insane quite yet, but cracking under the pressure because that is just what he is going to have to do.  This isn’t something that he wants to do, he hates it and has barely been keeping it together.

 

The break becomes physical when an earthquake occurs, brought on by Rand grasping saidin and channeling.  This is the point where Rand starts to have the real problem of grabbing saidin as a crutch, like an addict trying to get their next hit, “It is always there.  Calling to me.  Pulling at me.  Saidin.  The male half of the True Source.  Sometimes I can’t stop myself from reaching out for it…I can feel the taint even before I touch it…like a thin coat of vileness trying to hide the Light.  It turns my stomach, but I cannot help myself. I cannot! Only sometimes, I reach out, and it’s like trying to catch air…What if that happens when the Last Battle comes? What if I reach out and catch nothing?...I did not mean to do this.  It was as if I tried to open a tap, and instead pulled the whole tap out of the barrel.  It . . . filled me.  I had to send it somewhere before it burned me up, but I . . . I did not mean this” – The Dragon Reborn, p. 53.  This loss of control will have consequence, Moiraine, in the next chapter which essentially recaps the prologue but for our characters, outright states that this loss of control could bring the Dark One upon them all.  There have been deaths which are never confirmed to be from Carridin from the prologue, but heavily implied as the corpses resemble Rand.  This chapter is simply filling in our characters, but it doesn’t matter as by this point the reader should be realizing just how much everything is shifting.  We are moving away from Rand to other people and their role to play, as Rand only appears here from an outsider’s perspective.  His presence is felt throughout these chapters obviously, and he has actions, but we don’t get to see just what he is thinking.  The ball is rolling, things are building, and are about to burst.

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